Hot Stamper Living Stereo Classical and Orchestral Titles Available Now
We love the huge, solid and powerful sound of the piano on this recording. This piano has weight and heft. As a result, it sounds like a real piano.
For some reason, a great many Rubinstein recordings are not capable of reproducing those all-important qualities in the sound of the piano.
Those are, as I hope everyone understands by now, the ones we don’t sell. If the piano in a piano concerto recording doesn’t sound solid and powerful, what is the point of playing such a record?
Or, to be more accurate, what is the point of an audiophile playing such a record? (Those of you who would like to avoid bad sounding vintage classical and orchestra records have come to the right place. We’ve compiled a very long list of them precisely for that purpose, and we’ve been adding to it regularly.)
No doubt Kenneth Wilkinson made sure the recording captured the weight of the piano he was listening to as it played all those years ago in the wonderful acoustics of Kingsway Hall.
The strings have lovely Living Stereo (Decca-engineered) texture as well.
As befits a Wilkinson recording from 1961, there is no shortage of clarity to balance out the Tubey Magical warmth and richness.
When you add in the tremendous hall space, weight and energy, this becomes a Demo Disc orchestral recording by any standard.
Notes from a 2024 Shootout
Our notes above point out that:

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